Smart platforms like LG's webOS and Samsung's Tizen OS look cluttered and sometimes slow down with sluggish performance. I ...
LG is clearly dead-serious about expanding its smart TV kingdom, not just in terms of hardware but also software. In addition to adding new apps and services to its smart TVs, like Apple TV+ and ...
Score a cinema-sized, 120Hz OLED screen for half price.
LG is stepping up to the world. It would soon debut its initially exclusive Smart TV software called the webOS and be licensed to other companies to use the operating system under different brands ...
After being stung by the stillborn Google TV promise a few years back, LG decided to go with its own platform instead. Acquiring webOS from HP, which the latter acquired from Palm, LG has put webOS on ...
Long after HP dumped webOS as a platform for Palm smartphones and tablets, LG is still using the tech it snagged in 2013 to run apps and manage voice assistants on new smart TVs. While it continues to ...
LG has announced that owners of LG Smart TVs will be getting a new webOS software update and this new update will bring a range of new features to the company’s Smart TV lineup. The new webOS software ...
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. LG Electronics has acquired the webOS operating system technology from HP, the companies said Feb ...
LG says it will introduce a new version of its webOS smart TV software along with new televisions at January’s CES in Las Vegas. WebOS 3.0 comes with two new features: Magic Zoom allows viewers to ...
Corbin is a tech journalist and developer who worked at Android Police from 2016 until 2021. Check out his other work at corbin.io. Remember when Palm was still very much alive, and competed against ...
The South Korean tech developer, LG, is debuting a new display technology called the Smart Monitor, and it presents a new productivity device that delivers massive features to help improve remote work ...
Palm's ill-fated WebOS has been bought again, this time by Korean electronics giant LG, ostensibly to support the company's development of smart TVs. But don't expect a Palm TV — the once-admired OS ...